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Hardcover Cosmopolitan Greetings: Poems, 1986-1992 Book

ISBN: 006016770X

ISBN13: 9780060167707

Cosmopolitan Greetings: Poems, 1986-1992

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

Half a century after founding the Beat Generation, Allen Ginsberg has written this powerful collection of poems that are suffused with a range of emotional colors that gives Ginsberg's work an elegiac... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Literature & Fiction Poetry

Customer Reviews

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Interview

I met with Allen Ginsberg on his 1994 book tour for Cosmopolitan Greetings: Poems 1986-1992 (HarperCollins). I was accompanied by George Scrivani who was an editor, who created Hanuman Books with Raymond Foye and Francesco Clemente. I didn't get along so much with Allen Ginsberg as is evident in the following. I interrupted him every time he launched into a soundbite about the importance of the Beats. He often questioned me about my questions. In the interview, I stressed the importance of obscure Beats and none beats including Kenneth Rexroth, Robert Duncan, Jack Spicer, Bob Kaufman, Ray Bremser, and Irving Rosenthal. In fact, my mention of Sheeper being the best work of the Beat Generation, seemed to annoy Ginsberg. Later that day, Ginsberg read "Hum Bom!" at Candlestick Park and was booed by the apolitical and conservative baseball fans.Alexander Laurence: Cosmopolitan Greetings is your new book of poems which collects your most recent work: 1986-1992. Your poetry seems to have changed stylistically, especially in your delicate attention to language; I think of your earliest poems, such as Howl, possessing a complex use of language, utilizing many adjectives, and being influenced by Surrealism, yet the new writing is much more transparent, direct and simplified.Allen Ginsberg: More or less, with the occasional touches of a surreal sequence of images. There are a number of poems in here and in White Shroud which are examples of complicated language or complicated dream situations. Within some simple poems are some surreal word chains, particularly "I Went To The Movie of Life," "Grandma Earth's Song," and in the Jacob Rabinowitz poem: "Put me down now for not hearing your teenage heartbeat, / think back were you serious offering to kidnap me / to Philadelphia, Cleveland, Baltimore, Miami, God / knows, rescued from boring fame & Academic fortune, / Rimbaud Verlaine lovers starved together in boondocks houseflat / stockyard furnished rooms eating pea soup reading E. A. Poe?" I want to have lucid clear pictures in my poetry rather than jump-cut, cut-up, chaotic flashes. I want my poetry to be like a cinematic movie. The magic comes not from the speed up of the words, but the magic comes from the fact that it's an imaginary dream vision. The prototype of that is Shelley's "Triumph of Life."More at (www.freewilliamsburg.com)

Ginsberg in an occult form

This book to me is the best Ko'an ever composed by Ginsberg since 1997, 'tis been cliffhanging on my bosom

Second Last Time is a Charm

I must admit it, when I was quite younger I was amazed by Allen Ginsberg's work--in fact, it was if Ginsberg stretched his hand to me and welcomed into poetry. In the years that followed, my professors warned me that my taste would "mature" out of such 'pop poets', and into 'higher' forms of poetry. I must also admit that this particular book has confirmed my belief that Ginsberg was a poet that may have received his share of attention, but perhaps his share of literary credit is long overdue. In "Cosmo Greetings", Ginsberg's second last volume of poetry (the last would be the equally-excellent but posthumous "Death and Fame") sees Ginsberg growing older, looking at the world as one small, global community and with more humour than I have read in his work since the early years of "Howl" and "Kaddish".Give this one a try, and re-establish your love for this man's work.

Sex, politics, Buddhism, & more

"Cosmopolitan Greetings: Poems 1986-1992," by Allen Ginsberg, contains a number of recurring topic: literature and writing, gay love and sex, Buddhism, etc. Many poems reflect a political radicalism exemplified by a hatred of censorship and a distrust of governments. But I found the most striking recurring theme to be that of aging. Ginsburg writes very movingly of the physical and emotional ramifications of growing older. Mentioned a number of times in the book is Walt Whitman, whom Ginsberg acknowledges as his poetic forefather: "I write poetry because Walt Whitman gave world permission to speak with candor." Also cited are Blake and Pound.Some of my favorites in this collection: "Improvisation in Beijing," a Whitmanesque chant on why Ginsberg is a poet; "Sphincter," both a bawdy ode to the poet's title orifice and a celebration of gay sex; the title poem, "Cosmopolitan Greetings," a rather Blakean series of mystical declarations (example, "Inside skull vast as outside skull"); "Personals Ad," a poem in the form of a personals ad by an older poet seeking a young male lover; "Yiddishe Kopf," a celebration of the speaker's Jewishness; "Put Down Your Cigarette Rag (Dont Smoke)," an anti-smoking piece that attacks big tobacco companies and their politician allies; and "Everyday," a haiku-like poem about a lama.Throughout the book Ginsberg uses a nember of different poetic forms, some of which I have already mentioned. Other forms include songs (complete with musical notation), a letter, and even a comic strip. The book is often outrageous, often tender, and sometimes quite funny.

touch the 1950's

Allen Ginsberg was a nonconformist, a beat generation leader, and a phenominal poet. One of his last books, Cosmopolitan Greetings, was just one of many masterpieces given to the mass public by this prolific writer. The spokesman of a lost generation, Ginsberg howl's again in the 90's, not with the dark, brooding "best minds of my generation..." esque odes, but in a shortened, clear revolution of though patterns that defined his later writings. Cosmopolitan Greetings is a magnificant book to add to any intellectual collection, a real historical statement. May he rest in peace
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